The Scotsman

Call for concussion substitute­s in wake of football dementia report

● FA chief urges game’s lawmakers to alter rules on head injury replacemen­ts

- By GEORGE SESSIONS

Gregclarke,thefootbal­lassociati­on chairman, hopes concussion substitute­s are introduced to the game “as quickly as possible” in the wake of a report which found a higher incidence of neurodegen­erative disease among former footballer­s than in the general population.

The Scottish-led study, which was commission­ed by the FA and the Profession­al Footballer­s’ Associatio­n in November20­17,waspublish­ed on Monday and was led by consultant neuropatho­logist Dr Willie Stewart of Glasgow University. Clarke will present the findings of the Football’s Influence on Lifelong Health and Dementia Risk (FIELD) study to the Fifa Council in Shanghai this week, which he will attend in his capacity as a vice-president of the world governing body.

This phase of the report has not looked into why the incidence of these conditions is higher among footballer­s than the control group, but Clarke said that the game needed to understand whether repeated heading of the ball, or a failure to treat concussion properly, were contributo­ry factors.

“One of the things we’re pushing on, and I’ve spoken to Fifa and Uefa about this, is to introduce concussion substitute­s as quickly as possible,” he told the Digital Culture Media and Sport committee.

“If anyone has a head injury you don’t just want to have a doctor looking at them quickly and saying ‘you’re OK’ or ‘you’re not OK’ – you can send someone else on to play while that player is assessed to make sure we move away from time pressure on doctors to make really important health decisions.”

Football’s lawmaking body, the Internatio­nal Football Associatio­n Board (IFAB), will discuss concussion at the meeting of its football and technical advisory panels in Zurich today.

It is expected there will be a discussion on the potential use of temporary concussion substitute­s in the event of head injuries.

The study assessed the medical records of 7,676 men who played profession­al football in Scotland and were born between 1900 and 1976. Their records were matched against more than 23,000 individual­s from the general population.

It found that there was a fivefold risk of Alzheimer’s disease, a four-fold increase in motor neurone disease and a two-fold increase in Parkinson’s disease in former profession­al footballer­s compared to population controls.

Former Blackburn Rovers and Chelsea forward Chris Sutton, whose father Mike suffers from dementia, criticised the PFA for its handling of the issue.

Sutton said on Twitter: “If Gordon Taylor had anything about him he would apologise to all his union members and their families who he has failed… his own members dying in the most horrible and humiliatin­g way… he failed my dad and hundreds more.”

 ??  ?? 0 Chris Sutton: Wants PFA’S Gordon Taylor to apologise.
0 Chris Sutton: Wants PFA’S Gordon Taylor to apologise.
 ??  ?? 0 Greg Clarke: FA chairman has been lobbying Fifa and Uefa.
0 Greg Clarke: FA chairman has been lobbying Fifa and Uefa.

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